Notwithstanding the fact that the primary threats at issue in the government action stood outside of the PC operating-system market, Microsoft was found to have unlawfully monopolized that market. Microsoft II, 253 F.3d at Id. at 64, 71, 74, 76, 77.

and

Quote

Here, Novell alleges that Microsoft specifically targeted its products for destruction as a means to damage competition in the operating-systems market. Novell's allegations go beyond mere speculation. They are supported by internal Microsoft communications. For example, Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates specifically suggested waiting to publish critical technical specifications of Windows 95 until “we have a way to do a high level of integration [between Microsoft Office and Windows 95] that will be harder for [the] likes of ... WordPerfect to achieve.” J.A. 95. Otherwise, Gates noted, '[w]e can't compete with ... WordPerfect/Novell.' Id."

Novell v Microsoft, surpa, p 316.

Notwithstanding the foregoing, Microsoft won the suit, not because its illegal injuries to Word Perfect were "old wive's tales" but rather because Novell's lawyers, for some inexplicable reason, waited some eight years to bring suit, i.e Novell's suit was barred by the statute of limitations. See page 322.

Read it again. It wasn't coded to specifically block out WordPerfect. MS purposely held back bits of the code so application developers couldn't write apps for the OS. And that STILL doesn't excuse Novell (and later on, Corel) from designing an absolutely crap product.

Novell blew it on all levels, not only with WordPerfect, but with Netware as well. They could STILL be sitting on top of the world if it wasn't for fatal marketing blunders made back in the 90's.

I read it again. Microsoft as much as admits that Word Perfect is the better program, that, to paraphrase Churchill, "Word is a modest product that has much to be modest about." Gates' quote, at page 316, puts this to bed:

Quote

'[w]e can't compete with ... WordPerfect/Novell.'

.

So, to use an oxymoron, he "competed" illegally. You are no doubt correct that, while the rape was in progress, WordPerfect made some questionable decisions. The point is that Microsoft intentionally and illegally destroyed WordPerfect. Whether repeated by wives or judges, of that there can be no doubt.

You're barking up the wrong tree in blaming the "big bad Microsoft" for WordPerfect's shortcomings and demise. Novell and then Corel destroyed WordPerfect. Microsoft didn't help matters any, but the total blame can be placed squarely on the companies that held/hold the product.

I agree that it's useful to disable autorun, but the virus writers now disguise their executables with plausable sounding names (adapted from the contents of your flash drive) as well as diguising them with the standard folder icon. Other viruses infect any executables they find on the flash drive, so sooner or later the user double-clicks on an executable and installs the virus him/herself - even when logged on an as a limited user. The only way I've found so far to prevent this is with Windows' software restriction policy.

Perhaps the virus situation here in Cambodia is particularly bad with the constant use of flash drives to exchange files, pirated software, non-updated Windows installations and infected internet cafes. It's rare to come across a computer which doesn't have a virus and my lockable USB flash drive is my most valued possession!

Putting malware into their own microsoft programs in order to destroy competitionis an old trick of Gates. When MSdos operating system started there was acompetitive operating system which apparently was better. It was mainly used in Europe.MS then programmed their software that it will crash when used on that OS eventually killing it.MS eventually paid that company some money years later when MS came under pressure inEurope for its illegal competition destruction behaviour.